Free lighting, with big savings, offered to Pine Plains schools

PINE PLAINS — The Pine Plains Central School District is looking at a deal that will allow it to install energy-efficient light bulbs throughout the district at no cost. The estimated annual savings is $28,500.

A presentation by the Connecticut-based company Alliance Energy Solutions explained the offer at the district’s Board of Education meeting on Dec. 15.

Assistant Superintendent for Business and Finance Michael Goldbeck prefaced the presentation by explaining that the district received a letter from Central Hudson essentially warning that high peak energy uses will be billed at a higher rate. The threshold is 300 kilowatt hours at peak usage; Pine Plains registers around 320.

“It seemed feasible to reduce the consumption of energy to below the threshold,� he said.

Through Central Hudson, Goldbeck was made aware of a brand new program that performs retrofits for existing lighting in school districts. Because of higher state fees for energy companies, Central Hudson also needs to find a way to reduce usage. The utility reached a partnership with Energy Alliance and is offering a small business initiative to cover 70 percent of the cost of similar projects.

Alliance Energy Solutions will perform the audit, install the new lights and handle all paperwork.

Energy Alliance has performed an energy audit for the district, and the total cost to retrofit the lighting in all three school buildings is roughly $81,500. Central Hudson will pay for 70 percent or $57,000, leaving about $24,500, which Alliance Energy Consultant Tom Sheridan told the board at the meeting would be covered by an EPAct (Energy Policy Act) write-off, bringing the net cost to Pine Plains to “zero.�

“No cost whatsoever,� Sheridan reaffirmed, adding that the work would come with several warranties for the labor, parts and ballasts. No funding will be required up front by the district, he confirmed later, as is usually the case with grant opportunities and rebates.

Retrofitting a building like Stissing Mountain Middle/High School would take Alliance Energy about 30 days to complete, consultant Jason Andrews said. Work would be completed so that it did not affect the school’s schedule. An additional two weeks would be needed for each of the other two buildings in the district, the Seymour Smith Intermediate Learning Center and the Cold Spring Early Learning Center.

The board was skeptical, with President Bruce Kimball pointing out the well-known saying, “If it sounds too good to be true …� They asked if Energy Alliance had done similar projects for other schools, and Sheridan explained that the program through Central Hudson was literally two weeks old. There are three other schools currently looking into the same deal, he said, and he expected that more schools would sign up soon. Central Hudson is currently the only energy supply company in the area offering such an initiative.

Goldbeck said he has forwarded the company’s materials to the district’s lawyers and architects for review. The board did not take action at the Dec. 15 meeting.

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